Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

31 Sentences With "make emotional"

How to use make emotional in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "make emotional" and check conjugation/comparative form for "make emotional". Mastering all the usages of "make emotional" from sentence examples published by news publications.

We know our audience, know how to make emotional animal content.
"People tend to make emotional decisions based on that," Carter told Forbes.
According to Robbins, during big swings in the market, it's wise not to make emotional decisions.
Melbourne three-piece Huntly––Elspeth Scrine, Charles Teitelbaum and Andrew McEwan––make emotional, pastel-tinted techno-pop.
What sex hormones actually do is to make emotional regions of the brain more sensitive to the environment.
I didn't want to make emotional, sad music or music just talking about heartbreak or anything like that.
They all make emotional, and sometimes graphically violent, music that found a community, and popularity, on the streaming service.
The true power of social media for politicians is unleashed only if they use it to make emotional connections.
There, I realized: people often think they're making logical decisions; in reality, they make emotional decisions and try to rationalize with logic.
"People will make emotional decisions to avoid losses — and take larger losses than they should," he told Business Insider in an exclusive interview.
Last year I used the "Where I'm From" poem model to help students share their histories and make emotional connections with one another's stories.
In particular, the central conflict of season two is so outwardly theoretical that it takes the series several episodes to make emotional sense of it.
Schooled in feelings before finance, is it any wonder they sometimes make emotional decisions about how much to borrow for college or what to spend once they get there and get out?
Analysts, however, had warned that the company's ambitions in the film industry and its hopes of profiting from the associated merchandise could end up hurting it, partly because children do not make emotional attachments to characters in a market that is so oversaturated with movie-related toys.
"When you get caught up in a movement, sometimes you promote things that make emotional sense at the moment but don't really make any sense overall," said Wade Zirkle, a Denver businessman and veteran who founded the pro-interventionist Vets for Freedom, then recruited Mr. Hegseth to take over.
Here is a UKIP poster from the 2014 European Parliament elections: Here is another, employed by the Leave campaign in the lead-up to the Brexit vote: Both make emotional and visceral arguments about immigration — quite different from the traditional conservative arguments focused on the growth of a European superstate or the EU's democratic deficit.
The negative impact of the controversial statements by Omar and Tlaib, among others, prompted freshman Democrats Max RoseMax RoseCentrist Democrats urge caution over impeachment inquiry Social media giants restructure counterterrorism effort into independent group with staff Democrats must embrace Israel and denounce anti-Semitism in the party MORE and Dean Philips to make emotional, public, pleas for members of their own party to control their problematic rhetoric.
The goal of Schiller's research is to unravel the neurocognitive mechanisms that make emotional memories malleable, allowing for memory modification and for the adaptive adjustment of emotional and social behavior.
In 2014, nearly 80% of the people calling Samaritans did not express suicidal feelings. Samaritans believes that offering people the opportunity to be listened to in confidence, and accepted without prejudice, can alleviate despair and make emotional health a mainstream issue.
The users have learning needs (Eason, 1988). Known learning needs are the emotional guidance. Users need to make emotional steps in order to make cognitive steps. If they fear the system due to its difficult handling they may not be able to understand the cognitive steps needed to successfully carry out the tasks.
Much of the early research on attachment in humans was done by John Bowlby and his associates. Bowlby proposed that babies have an inbuilt need from birth to make emotional attachments, i.e. bonds, because this increases the chances of survival by ensuring that they receive the care they need. Bowlby did not describe mutuality in attachment.
The night before the battle, the black soldiers conduct a religious service. Several make emotional speeches to inspire others, including Trip, who finally embraces his fellow soldiers. On their way to the battlefield, the 54th is cheered by the same Union troops who had scorned them earlier. The 54th leads the charge on the fort, suffering serious losses.
Crime scene cleaner Morgan Sher has trouble keeping assistants because of the gruesome work. She also struggles in her personal life to make emotional connections with others. At a crime scene, she meets Nick Hopewell, the new partner of Detective Ed Braxton. Braxton does not get along with Sher, as his reputation was damaged after she helped solve a crime he could not.
The stressor and the individual's appraisal of the stressor may determine the effectiveness of emotional approach coping as a mechanism for managing stress. An appraisal of a stressful situation as uncontrollable may make emotional approach coping an advantageous coping mechanism. In fact, one study of undergraduates shows that when faced with a stressor individuals appraise as more uncontrollable, they are more likely to endorse using emotional approach coping to manage it.
Less than one month after the Red Sox dramatic 2004 World Series victory, Kapler departed to play for Japan's Yomiuri Giants. He received a $2 million deal plus a $700,000 signing bonus, compared to the $750,000 salary he had received from the Red Sox. Driven by the memory of an elementary-school report that he had written about Japan, he felt it was time for a change. "I tend to make emotional decisions," he said.
Cognitive behavioral training (CBTraining) is a cognitive-based process designed with the aim to systematically break down emotionally driven dependencies and behaviors, replacing them with behaviors that are based on rational choice. Like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), the philosophy of CBTraining is rooted to one essential notion: feeling and thought are linked. CBTraining contends that in any emotionally dependent relationship, people make emotional decisions rather than rational choices. When an emotionally dependent relationship occurs, it creates a belief-induced emotional state.
Males are less likely to make emotional or personal disclosures to other males, because this could potentially be information used against them. They will disclose this to females however (as they are not in competition with them) and males tend to regard friendships with females as more meaningful, intimate and pleasant. Male-male friendships are generally more like alliances while female-female friendships are generally much more attachment based. This also means that the end of male-male friendships tends to be less emotionally upsetting than that of female-female friendships.
Jenefer Robinson has published widely on topics related to philosophy of art, literature and music. In Deeper than Reason: Emotion and its Role in Literature, Music and Art (Oxford University Press, 2005) she developed a new theory of emotion and its connection with the arts. In the book she claims that we not only "self-evidently make emotional responses in the presence of art works, but that some art works (...) need to be experienced emotionally if they are to be properly understood". In her edited collection Music and Meaning (Cornell University Press, 1997) she brings together ten essays on the nature of musical meaning.
In order to undertake space travel, the remote- controlled robot has been given some human capabilities, including the ability to "feel" emotions and react via a telepathic device built into his robotic brain. Under the watchful eyes of Harrison's trusted assistant Karl (Franz Roehn), the giant robot Tobor is unveiled and then demonstrated. Unknown to the scientists, a foreign spy chief (Steven Geray) has quietly joined the group of reporters; he quickly draws up a plan to steal the robot. While trying to perfect the robot's control systems, an inadvertent episode involving Gadge, who sneaks into the laboratory and turns on Tobor, shows that the robot can make emotional connections with people.
This book was partly a psychobiography of Nietzsche, Picasso, Kollwitz and Buster Keaton; (in Miller's later book, The Body Never Lies, published in 2005, she included similar analyses of Dostoyevsky, Chekhov, Schiller, Rimbaud, Mishima, Proust and James Joyce). According to Miller, Nietzsche did not experience a loving family and his philosophical output was a metaphor of an unconscious drive against his family's oppressive theological tradition. She believed that the philosophical system was flawed because Nietzsche was unable to make emotional contact with the abused child inside him. Though Nietzsche was severely punished by a father who lost his mind when Nietzsche was a little boy, Miller did not accept the genetic theory of madness.
His life continued in a downward spiral, leaving him in heavy debt and offering oral sex to strangers for money in the alleys. The boys help him get a job at Lake Tardicaca, a summer camp for kids with physical and mental disabilities, as a towel to dry off the campers. However, Towelie persists in drug use and fellating strangers in the supply closet, and is fired by the camp. The boys confront Towelie and make emotional speeches to him as a plea to help him from killing himself (except for Cartman, who uses this opportunity to read what appears to be several tens of thousands of pages of anti-Semitic remarks on television, which the psychiatrist allows to continue in respect of the "no interruptions" rule, much to Kyle's irritation).

No results under this filter, show 31 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.